3rd Edition: Chapter 2

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Chapter 2
Application Layer
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Computer Networking:
A Top Down Approach
Featuring the Internet,
3rd edition.
Jim Kurose, Keith Ross
Addison-Wesley, July
2004.
Thanks and enjoy! JFK/KWR
All material copyright 1996-2006
J.F Kurose and K.W. Ross, All Rights Reserved
2: Application Layer
1
Chapter 2: Application layer
 2.1 Principles of
network applications
 2.2 Web and HTTP
 2.3 FTP
 2.4 Electronic Mail

SMTP, POP3, IMAP
 2.5 DNS
 2.6 P2P file sharing
 2.7 Socket programming
with TCP
 2.8 Socket programming
with UDP
 2.9 Building a Web
server
2: Application Layer
2
Chapter 2: Application Layer
Our goals:
 conceptual,
implementation
aspects of network
application protocols
 transport-layer
service models
 client-server
paradigm

peer-to-peer
paradigm
 learn about protocols
by examining popular
application-level
protocols




HTTP
FTP
SMTP / POP3 / IMAP
DNS
 programming network
applications

socket API
2: Application Layer
3
Some network apps
 E-mail
 Internet telephone
 Web
 Real-time video
 Instant messaging
 Remote login
 P2P file sharing
 Multi-user network
games
 Streaming stored
video clips
conference
 Massive parallel
computing



2: Application Layer
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Creating a network app
Write programs that



run on different end
systems and
communicate over a
network.
e.g., Web: Web server
software communicates
with browser software
little software written for
devices in network core


network core devices do
not run user application
code
application on end systems
allows for rapid app
development, propagation
application
transport
network
data link
physical
application
transport
network
data link
physical
application
transport
network
data link
physical
2: Application Layer
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Chapter 2: Application layer
 2.1 Principles of
network applications
 2.2 Web and HTTP
 2.3 FTP
 2.4 Electronic Mail

SMTP, POP3, IMAP
 2.5 DNS
 2.6 P2P file sharing
 2.7 Socket programming
with TCP
 2.8 Socket programming
with UDP
 2.9 Building a Web
server
2: Application Layer
6
Application architectures
 Client-server
 Peer-to-peer (P2P)
 Hybrid of client-server and P2P
2: Application Layer
7
Client-server architecture
server:



always-on host
permanent IP address
server farms for scaling
clients:




communicate with
server
may be intermittently
connected
may have dynamic IP
addresses
do not communicate
directly with each other
2: Application Layer
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Pure P2P architecture
 no always-on server
 arbitrary end systems
directly communicate
 peers are intermittently
connected and change IP
addresses
 example: Gnutella
Highly scalable but
difficult to manage
2: Application Layer
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Hybrid of client-server and P2P
Skype



Internet telephony app
Finding address of remote party: centralized server(s)
Client-client connection is direct (not through server)
Instant messaging


Chatting between two users is P2P
Presence detection/location centralized:
• User registers its IP address with central server when it
comes online
• User contacts central server to find IP addresses of
buddies
2: Application Layer
10
Processes communicating
Process: program running
within a host.
 within same host, two
processes communicate
using inter-process
communication (defined
by OS).
 processes in different
hosts communicate by
exchanging messages
Client process: process
that initiates
communication
Server process: process
that waits to be
contacted
 Note: applications with
P2P architectures have
client processes &
server processes
2: Application Layer
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Sockets
 process sends/receives
messages to/from its
socket
 socket analogous to door


sending process shoves
message out door
sending process relies on
transport infrastructure
on other side of door which
brings message to socket
at receiving process
host or
server
host or
server
process
controlled by
app developer
process
socket
socket
TCP with
buffers,
variables
Internet
TCP with
buffers,
variables
controlled
by OS
 API: (1) choice of transport protocol; (2) ability to fix
a few parameters (lots more on this later)
2: Application Layer
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Addressing processes
 to receive messages,
process must have
identifier
 host device has
unique32-bit IP
address
 Q: does IP address of
host on which process
runs suffice for
identifying the
process?
2: Application Layer
13
Addressing processes
 to receive messages,
process must have
identifier
 host device has
unique32-bit IP
address
 Q: does IP address of
host on which process
runs suffice for
identifying the
process?

Answer: NO, many
processes can be running
on same host
 identifier includes both
IP address and port
numbers associated with
process on host.
 Example port numbers:


HTTP server: 80
Mail server: 25
 to send HTTP message
to gaia.cs.umass.edu web
server:


IP address: 128.119.245.12
Port number: 80
 more shortly…
2: Application Layer
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App-layer protocol defines
 Types of messages
exchanged,

e.g., request, response
 Message syntax:
 what fields in messages &
how fields are delineated
 Message semantics
 meaning of information in
fields
Public-domain protocols:
 defined in RFCs
 allows for
interoperability
 e.g., HTTP, SMTP
Proprietary protocols:
 e.g., KaZaA
 Rules for when and how
processes send &
respond to messages
2: Application Layer
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What transport service does an app need?
Data loss
 some apps (e.g., audio) can
tolerate some loss
 other apps (e.g., file
transfer, telnet) require
100% reliable data
transfer
Timing
 some apps (e.g.,
Internet telephony,
interactive games)
require low delay to be
“effective”
Bandwidth
 some apps (e.g.,
multimedia) require
minimum amount of
bandwidth to be
“effective”
 other apps (“elastic
apps”) make use of
whatever bandwidth
they get
2: Application Layer
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Transport service requirements of common apps
Data loss
Bandwidth
Time Sensitive
file transfer
e-mail
Web documents
real-time audio/video
no loss
no loss
no loss
loss-tolerant
no
no
no
yes, 100’s msec
stored audio/video
interactive games
instant messaging
loss-tolerant
loss-tolerant
no loss
elastic
elastic
elastic
audio: 5kbps-1Mbps
video:10kbps-5Mbps
same as above
few kbps up
elastic
Application
yes, few secs
yes, 100’s msec
yes and no
2: Application Layer
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Internet transport protocols services
TCP service:
 connection-oriented: setup




required between client and
server processes
reliable transport between
sending and receiving process
flow control: sender won’t
overwhelm receiver
congestion control: throttle
sender when network
overloaded
does not provide: timing,
minimum bandwidth
guarantees
UDP service:
 unreliable data transfer
between sending and
receiving process
 does not provide:
connection setup,
reliability, flow control,
congestion control, timing,
or bandwidth guarantee
Q: why bother? Why is
there a UDP?
2: Application Layer
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Internet apps: application, transport protocols
Application
e-mail
remote terminal access
Web
file transfer
streaming multimedia
Internet telephony
Application
layer protocol
Underlying
transport protocol
SMTP [RFC 2821]
Telnet [RFC 854]
HTTP [RFC 2616]
FTP [RFC 959]
proprietary
(e.g. RealNetworks)
proprietary
(e.g., Vonage,Dialpad)
TCP
TCP
TCP
TCP
TCP or UDP
typically UDP
2: Application Layer
19
Chapter 2: Application layer
 2.1 Principles of
network applications


app architectures
app requirements
 2.2 Web and HTTP
 2.4 Electronic Mail
 SMTP, POP3, IMAP
 2.5 DNS
 2.6 P2P file sharing
 2.7 Socket programming
with TCP
 2.8 Socket programming
with UDP
 2.9 Building a Web
server
2: Application Layer
20
Web and HTTP
First some jargon
 Web page consists of objects
 Object can be HTML file, JPEG image, Java
applet, audio file,…
 Web page consists of base HTML-file which
includes several referenced objects
 Each object is addressable by a URL
 Example URL:
www.someschool.edu/someDept/pic.gif
host name
path name
2: Application Layer
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HTTP overview
HTTP: hypertext
transfer protocol
 Web’s application layer
protocol
 client/server model
 client: browser that
requests, receives,
“displays” Web objects
 server: Web server
sends objects in
response to requests
 HTTP 1.0: RFC 1945
 HTTP 1.1: RFC 2068
PC running
Explorer
Server
running
Apache Web
server
Mac running
Navigator
2: Application Layer
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HTTP overview (continued)
Uses TCP:
 client initiates TCP
connection (creates socket)
to server, port 80
 server accepts TCP
connection from client
 HTTP messages (applicationlayer protocol messages)
exchanged between browser
(HTTP client) and Web
server (HTTP server)
 TCP connection closed
HTTP is “stateless”
 server maintains no
information about
past client requests
aside
Protocols that maintain
“state” are complex!
 past history (state) must
be maintained
 if server/client crashes,
their views of “state” may
be inconsistent, must be
reconciled
2: Application Layer
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HTTP connections
Nonpersistent HTTP
 At most one object is
sent over a TCP
connection.
 HTTP/1.0 uses
nonpersistent HTTP
Persistent HTTP
 Multiple objects can
be sent over single
TCP connection
between client and
server.
 HTTP/1.1 uses
persistent connections
in default mode
2: Application Layer
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Nonpersistent HTTP
(contains text,
Suppose user enters URL
references to 10
www.someSchool.edu/someDepartment/home.index
jpeg images)
1a. HTTP client initiates TCP
connection to HTTP server
(process) at
www.someSchool.edu on port 80
2. HTTP client sends HTTP
request message (containing
URL) into TCP connection
socket. Message indicates
that client wants object
someDepartment/home.index
1b. HTTP server at host
www.someSchool.edu waiting
for TCP connection at port 80.
“accepts” connection, notifying
client
3. HTTP server receives request
message, forms response
message containing requested
object, and sends message
into its socket
time
2: Application Layer
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Nonpersistent HTTP (cont.)
4. HTTP server closes TCP
5. HTTP client receives response
connection.
message containing html file,
displays html. Parsing html
file, finds 10 referenced jpeg
objects
time 6. Steps 1-5 repeated for each
of 10 jpeg objects
2: Application Layer
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Non-Persistent HTTP: Response time
Definition of RTT: time to
send a small packet to
travel from client to
server and back.
Response time:
 one RTT to initiate TCP
connection
 one RTT for HTTP
request and first few
bytes of HTTP response
to return
 file transmission time
total = 2RTT+transmit time
initiate TCP
connection
RTT
request
file
time to
transmit
file
RTT
file
received
time
time
2: Application Layer
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Persistent HTTP
Nonpersistent HTTP issues:
 requires 2 RTTs per object
 OS overhead for each TCP
connection
 browsers often open parallel
TCP connections to fetch
referenced objects
Persistent HTTP
 server leaves connection
open after sending response
 subsequent HTTP messages
between same client/server
sent over open connection
Persistent without pipelining:
 client issues new request
only when previous
response has been received
 one RTT for each
referenced object
Persistent with pipelining:
 default in HTTP/1.1
 client sends requests as
soon as it encounters a
referenced object
 as little as one RTT for all
the referenced objects
2: Application Layer
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HTTP request message
 two types of HTTP messages: request, response
 HTTP request message:
 ASCII (human-readable format)
request line
(GET, POST,
HEAD commands)
GET /somedir/page.html HTTP/1.1
Host: www.someschool.edu
User-agent: Mozilla/4.0
header Connection: close
lines Accept-language:fr
Carriage return,
line feed
indicates end
of message
(extra carriage return, line feed)
2: Application Layer
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HTTP request message: general format
2: Application Layer
30
Uploading form input
Post method:
 Web page often
includes form input
 Input is uploaded to
server in entity body
URL method:
 Uses GET method
 Input is uploaded in
URL field of request
line:
www.somesite.com/animalsearch?monkeys&banana
2: Application Layer
31
Method types
HTTP/1.0
 GET
 POST
 HEAD

asks server to leave
requested object out of
response
HTTP/1.1
 GET, POST, HEAD
 PUT

uploads file in entity
body to path specified
in URL field
 DELETE
 deletes file specified in
the URL field
2: Application Layer
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HTTP response message
status line
(protocol
status code
status phrase)
header
lines
data, e.g.,
requested
HTML file
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Connection close
Date: Thu, 06 Aug 1998 12:00:15 GMT
Server: Apache/1.3.0 (Unix)
Last-Modified: Mon, 22 Jun 1998 …...
Content-Length: 6821
Content-Type: text/html
data data data data data ...
2: Application Layer
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HTTP response status codes
In first line in server->client response message.
A few sample codes:
200 OK

request succeeded, requested object later in this message
301 Moved Permanently

requested object moved, new location specified later in
this message (Location:)
400 Bad Request

request message not understood by server
404 Not Found

requested document not found on this server
505 HTTP Version Not Supported
2: Application Layer
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Trying out HTTP (client side) for yourself
1. Telnet to your favorite Web server:
telnet cis.poly.edu 80
Opens TCP connection to port 80
(default HTTP server port) at cis.poly.edu.
Anything typed in sent
to port 80 at cis.poly.edu
2. Type in a GET HTTP request:
GET /~ross/ HTTP/1.1
Host: cis.poly.edu
By typing this in (hit carriage
return twice), you send
this minimal (but complete)
GET request to HTTP server
3. Look at response message sent by HTTP server!
2: Application Layer
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Let’s look at HTTP in action
 telnet example
 Ethereal example
2: Application Layer
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User-server state: cookies
Many major Web sites
use cookies
Four components:
1) cookie header line of
HTTP response message
2) cookie header line in
HTTP request message
3) cookie file kept on
user’s host, managed by
user’s browser
4) back-end database at
Web site
Example:



Susan access Internet
always from same PC
She visits a specific ecommerce site for first
time
When initial HTTP
requests arrives at site,
site creates a unique ID
and creates an entry in
backend database for
ID
2: Application Layer
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Cookies: keeping “state” (cont.)
client
Cookie file
server
usual http request msg
usual http response +
ebay: 8734
Cookie file
amazon: 1678
ebay: 8734
Set-cookie: 1678
usual http request msg
cookie: 1678
usual http response msg
one week later:
Cookie file
amazon: 1678
ebay: 8734
usual http request msg
cookie: 1678
usual http response msg
server
creates ID
1678 for user
cookiespecific
action
cookiespectific
action
2: Application Layer
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Cookies (continued)
What cookies can bring:
 authorization
 shopping carts
 recommendations
 user session state (Web e-
mail)
aside
Cookies and privacy:
 cookies permit sites to
learn a lot about you
 you may supply name
and e-mail to sites
How to keep “state”:
 Protocol endpoints:
maintain state at
sender/receiver over
multiple transactions
 cookies: http messages
carry state
2: Application Layer
39
Web caches (proxy server)
Goal: satisfy client request without involving origin server
 user sets browser: Web
accesses via cache
 browser sends all HTTP
requests to cache


object in cache: cache
returns object
else cache requests
object from origin
server, then returns
object to client
origin
server
client
client
Proxy
server
origin
server
2: Application Layer
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More about Web caching
 Cache acts as both client
and server
 Typically cache is installed
by ISP (university,
company, residential ISP)
Why Web caching?
 Reduce response time for
client request.
 Reduce traffic on an
institution’s access link.
 Internet dense with
caches: enables “poor”
content providers to
effectively deliver content
(but so does P2P file
sharing)
2: Application Layer
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Caching example
Assumptions
 average object size = 100,000
bits
 avg. request rate from
institution’s browsers to origin
servers = 15/sec
 delay from institutional router
to any origin server and back
to router = 2 sec
Consequences
origin
servers
public
Internet
1.5 Mbps
access link
institutional
network
10 Mbps LAN
 utilization on LAN = 15%
 utilization on access link = 100%
 total delay
= Internet delay +
access delay + LAN delay
= 2 sec + minutes + milliseconds
institutional
cache
2: Application Layer
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Caching example (cont)
Possible solution
 increase bandwidth of access
link to, say, 10 Mbps
Consequences
origin
servers
public
Internet
 utilization on LAN = 15%
 utilization on access link = 15%
= Internet delay +
access delay + LAN delay
= 2 sec + msecs + msecs
 often a costly upgrade
10 Mbps
access link
 Total delay
institutional
network
10 Mbps LAN
institutional
cache
2: Application Layer
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Caching example (cont)
origin
servers
Install cache
 suppose hit rate is .4
Consequence
public
Internet
 40% requests will be
satisfied almost immediately
 60% requests satisfied by
origin server
 utilization of access link
reduced to 60%, resulting in
negligible delays (say 10
msec)
 total avg delay = Internet
delay + access delay + LAN
delay = .6*(2.01) secs +
.4*milliseconds < 1.4 secs
1.5 Mbps
access link
institutional
network
10 Mbps LAN
institutional
cache
2: Application Layer
44
Conditional GET
 Goal: don’t send object if
cache has up-to-date cached
version
 cache: specify date of
cached copy in HTTP request
If-modified-since:
<date>
 server: response contains no
object if cached copy is upto-date:
HTTP/1.0 304 Not
Modified
server
cache
HTTP request msg
If-modified-since:
<date>
HTTP response
object
not
modified
HTTP/1.0
304 Not Modified
HTTP request msg
If-modified-since:
<date>
HTTP response
object
modified
HTTP/1.0 200 OK
<data>
2: Application Layer
45
Chapter 2: Application layer
 2.1 Principles of
network applications
 2.2 Web and HTTP
 2.3 FTP
 2.4 Electronic Mail

SMTP, POP3, IMAP
 2.5 DNS
 2.6 P2P file sharing
 2.7 Socket programming
with TCP
 2.8 Socket programming
with UDP
 2.9 Building a Web
server
2: Application Layer
46
FTP: the file transfer protocol
user
at host
FTP
FTP
user
client
interface
file transfer
local file
system
FTP
server
remote file
system
 transfer file to/from remote host
 client/server model
client: side that initiates transfer (either to/from
remote)
 server: remote host
 ftp: RFC 959
 ftp server: port 21

2: Application Layer
47
FTP: separate control, data connections
TCP control connection
port 21
 FTP client contacts FTP




server at port 21, specifying
TCP as transport protocol
Client obtains authorization
over control connection
Client browses remote
directory by sending
commands over control
connection.
When server receives file
transfer command, server
opens 2nd TCP connection (for
file) to client
After transferring one file,
server closes data
connection.
FTP
client
TCP data connection
port 20
FTP
server
 Server opens another TCP
data connection to transfer
another file.
 Control connection: “out of
band”
 FTP server maintains “state”:
current directory, earlier
authentication
2: Application Layer
48
FTP commands, responses
Sample commands:
Sample return codes
 sent as ASCII text over
 status code and phrase (as
control channel
 USER username
 PASS password
 LIST return list of file in


current directory
 RETR filename retrieves

 STOR filename stores

(gets) file
(puts) file onto remote
host
in HTTP)
331 Username OK,
password required
125 data connection
already open;
transfer starting
425 Can’t open data
connection
452 Error writing
file
2: Application Layer
49
Chapter 2: Application layer
 2.1 Principles of
network applications
 2.2 Web and HTTP
 2.3 FTP
 2.4 Electronic Mail

SMTP, POP3, IMAP
 2.5 DNS
 2.6 P2P file sharing
 2.7 Socket programming
with TCP
 2.8 Socket programming
with UDP
 2.9 Building a Web
server
2: Application Layer
50
Electronic Mail
outgoing
message queue
user mailbox
user
agent
Three major components:
 user agents
 mail servers
mail
server
SMTP
 simple mail transfer
protocol: SMTP
User Agent
 a.k.a. “mail reader”
 composing, editing, reading
mail messages
 e.g., Eudora, Outlook, elm,
Netscape Messenger
 outgoing, incoming messages
stored on server
SMTP
mail
server
user
agent
SMTP
user
agent
mail
server
user
agent
user
agent
user
agent
2: Application Layer
51
Electronic Mail: mail servers
user
agent
Mail Servers
 mailbox contains incoming
messages for user
 message queue of outgoing
(to be sent) mail messages
 SMTP protocol between mail
servers to send email
messages
 client: sending mail
server
 “server”: receiving mail
server
mail
server
SMTP
SMTP
mail
server
user
agent
SMTP
user
agent
mail
server
user
agent
user
agent
user
agent
2: Application Layer
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Electronic Mail: SMTP [RFC 2821]
 uses TCP to reliably transfer email message from client
to server, port 25
 direct transfer: sending server to receiving server
 three phases of transfer
 handshaking (greeting)
 transfer of messages
 closure
 command/response interaction
 commands: ASCII text
 response: status code and phrase
 messages must be in 7-bit ASCII
2: Application Layer
53
Scenario: Alice sends message to Bob
1) Alice uses UA to compose
message and “to”
[email protected]
2) Alice’s UA sends message
to her mail server; message
placed in message queue
3) Client side of SMTP opens
TCP connection with Bob’s
mail server
1
user
agent
2
mail
server
3
4) SMTP client sends Alice’s
message over the TCP
connection
5) Bob’s mail server places the
message in Bob’s mailbox
6) Bob invokes his user agent
to read message
mail
server
4
5
6
user
agent
2: Application Layer
54
Sample SMTP interaction
S:
C:
S:
C:
S:
C:
S:
C:
S:
C:
C:
C:
S:
C:
S:
220 hamburger.edu
HELO crepes.fr
250 Hello crepes.fr, pleased to meet you
MAIL FROM: <[email protected]>
250 [email protected]... Sender ok
RCPT TO: <[email protected]>
250 [email protected] ... Recipient ok
DATA
354 Enter mail, end with "." on a line by itself
Do you like ketchup?
How about pickles?
.
250 Message accepted for delivery
QUIT
221 hamburger.edu closing connection
2: Application Layer
55
Try SMTP interaction for yourself:
 telnet servername 25
 see 220 reply from server
 enter HELO, MAIL FROM, RCPT TO, DATA, QUIT
commands
above lets you send email without using email client
(reader)
2: Application Layer
56
SMTP: final words
 SMTP uses persistent
connections
 SMTP requires message
(header & body) to be in 7bit ASCII
 SMTP server uses
CRLF.CRLF to determine
end of message
Comparison with HTTP:
 HTTP: pull
 SMTP: push
 both have ASCII
command/response
interaction, status codes
 HTTP: each object
encapsulated in its own
response msg
 SMTP: multiple objects
sent in multipart msg
2: Application Layer
57
Mail message format
SMTP: protocol for
exchanging email msgs
RFC 822: standard for text
message format:
 header lines, e.g.,
To:
 From:
 Subject:
different from SMTP
commands!

header
blank
line
body
 body

the “message”, ASCII
characters only
2: Application Layer
58
Message format: multimedia extensions
 MIME: multimedia mail extension, RFC 2045, 2056
 additional lines in msg header declare MIME content
type
MIME version
method used
to encode data
multimedia data
type, subtype,
parameter declaration
encoded data
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Picture of yummy crepe.
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
Content-Type: image/jpeg
base64 encoded data .....
.........................
......base64 encoded data
2: Application Layer
59
Mail access protocols
user
agent
SMTP
SMTP
sender’s mail
server
access
protocol
user
agent
receiver’s mail
server
 SMTP: delivery/storage to receiver’s server
 Mail access protocol: retrieval from server



POP: Post Office Protocol [RFC 1939]
• authorization (agent <-->server) and download
IMAP: Internet Mail Access Protocol [RFC 1730]
• more features (more complex)
• manipulation of stored msgs on server
HTTP: Hotmail , Yahoo! Mail, etc.
2: Application Layer
60
POP3 protocol
authorization phase
 client commands:
user: declare username
 pass: password
 server responses
 +OK
 -ERR

transaction phase, client:
 list: list message numbers
 retr: retrieve message by
number
 dele: delete
 quit
S:
C:
S:
C:
S:
+OK POP3 server ready
user bob
+OK
pass hungry
+OK user successfully logged
C:
S:
S:
S:
C:
S:
S:
C:
C:
S:
S:
C:
C:
S:
list
1 498
2 912
.
retr 1
<message 1 contents>
.
dele 1
retr 2
<message 1 contents>
.
dele 2
quit
+OK POP3 server signing off
2: Application Layer
on
61
POP3 (more) and IMAP
More about POP3
 Previous example uses
“download and delete”
mode.
 Bob cannot re-read email if he changes
client
 “Download-and-keep”:
copies of messages on
different clients
 POP3 is stateless
across sessions
IMAP
 Keep all messages in
one place: the server
 Allows user to
organize messages in
folders
 IMAP keeps user state
across sessions:

names of folders and
mappings between
message IDs and folder
name
2: Application Layer
62
Chapter 2: Application layer
 2.1 Principles of
network applications
 2.2 Web and HTTP
 2.3 FTP
 2.4 Electronic Mail

SMTP, POP3, IMAP
 2.5 DNS
 2.6 P2P file sharing
 2.7 Socket programming
with TCP
 2.8 Socket programming
with UDP
 2.9 Building a Web
server
2: Application Layer
63
DNS: Domain Name System
People: many identifiers:

SSN, name, passport #
Internet hosts, routers:


IP address (32 bit) used for addressing
datagrams
“name”, e.g.,
ww.yahoo.com - used by
humans
Q: map between IP
addresses and name ?
Domain Name System:
 distributed database
implemented in hierarchy of
many name servers
 application-layer protocol
host, routers, name servers to
communicate to resolve names
(address/name translation)
 note: core Internet
function, implemented as
application-layer protocol
 complexity at network’s
“edge”
2: Application Layer
64
DNS
DNS services
 Hostname to IP
address translation
 Host aliasing

Canonical and alias
names
 Mail server aliasing
 Load distribution
 Replicated Web
servers: set of IP
addresses for one
canonical name
Why not centralize DNS?
 single point of failure
 traffic volume
 distant centralized
database
 maintenance
doesn’t scale!
2: Application Layer
65
Distributed, Hierarchical Database
Root DNS Servers
com DNS servers
yahoo.com
amazon.com
DNS servers DNS servers
org DNS servers
pbs.org
DNS servers
edu DNS servers
poly.edu
umass.edu
DNS serversDNS servers
Client wants IP for www.amazon.com; 1st approx:
 Client queries a root server to find com DNS
server
 Client queries com DNS server to get amazon.com
DNS server
 Client queries amazon.com DNS server to get IP
address for www.amazon.com
2: Application Layer
66
DNS: Root name servers
 contacted by local name server that can not resolve name
 root name server:



contacts authoritative name server if name mapping not known
gets mapping
returns mapping to local name server
a Verisign, Dulles, VA
c Cogent, Herndon, VA (also Los Angeles)
d U Maryland College Park, MD
k RIPE London (also Amsterdam,
g US DoD Vienna, VA
Frankfurt)
i Autonomica, Stockholm (plus 3
h ARL Aberdeen, MD
j Verisign, ( 11 locations)
other locations)
m WIDE Tokyo
e NASA Mt View, CA
f Internet Software C. Palo Alto,
CA (and 17 other locations)
13 root name
servers worldwide
b USC-ISI Marina del Rey, CA
l ICANN Los Angeles, CA
2: Application Layer
67
TLD and Authoritative Servers
 Top-level domain (TLD) servers: responsible
for com, org, net, edu, etc, and all top-level
country domains uk, fr, ca, jp.
Network solutions maintains servers for com TLD
 Educause for edu TLD

 Authoritative DNS servers: organization’s
DNS servers, providing authoritative
hostname to IP mappings for organization’s
servers (e.g., Web and mail).

Can be maintained by organization or service
provider
2: Application Layer
68
Local Name Server
 Does not strictly belong to hierarchy
 Each ISP (residential ISP, company,
university) has one.

Also called “default name server”
 When a host makes a DNS query, query is
sent to its local DNS server

Acts as a proxy, forwards query into hierarchy.
2: Application Layer
69
Example
root DNS server
2
 Host at cis.poly.edu
3
wants IP address for
gaia.cs.umass.edu
TLD DNS server
4
5
local DNS server
dns.poly.edu
1
8
requesting host
7
6
authoritative DNS server
dns.cs.umass.edu
cis.poly.edu
gaia.cs.umass.edu
2: Application Layer
70
Recursive queries
recursive query:
2
 puts burden of name
resolution on
contacted name
server
 heavy load?
iterated query:
 contacted server
root DNS server
3
7
6
TLD DNS server
local DNS server
dns.poly.edu
1
5
4
8
replies with name of
server to contact
 “I don’t know this
requesting host
name, but ask this
cis.poly.edu
server”
authoritative DNS server
dns.cs.umass.edu
gaia.cs.umass.edu
2: Application Layer
71
DNS: caching and updating records
 once (any) name server learns mapping, it caches
mapping
 cache entries timeout (disappear) after some
time
 TLD servers typically cached in local name
servers
• Thus root name servers not often visited
 update/notify mechanisms under design by IETF
 RFC 2136

http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/dnsind-charter.html
2: Application Layer
72
DNS records
DNS: distributed db storing resource records (RR)
RR format: (name,
 Type=A
 name is hostname
 value is IP address
 Type=NS
 name is domain (e.g.
foo.com)
 value is hostname of
authoritative name
server for this domain
value, type, ttl)
 Type=CNAME
 name is alias name for some
“canonical” (the real) name
www.ibm.com is really
servereast.backup2.ibm.com

value is canonical name
 Type=MX
 value is name of mailserver
associated with name
2: Application Layer
73
DNS protocol, messages
DNS protocol : query and reply messages, both with
same message format
msg header
 identification: 16 bit #
for query, reply to query
uses same #
 flags:
 query or reply
 recursion desired
 recursion available
 reply is authoritative
2: Application Layer
74
DNS protocol, messages
Name, type fields
for a query
RRs in response
to query
records for
authoritative servers
additional “helpful”
info that may be used
2: Application Layer
75
Inserting records into DNS
 Example: just created startup “Network Utopia”
 Register name networkuptopia.com at a registrar
(e.g., Network Solutions)


Need to provide registrar with names and IP addresses of
your authoritative name server (primary and secondary)
Registrar inserts two RRs into the com TLD server:
(networkutopia.com, dns1.networkutopia.com, NS)
(dns1.networkutopia.com, 212.212.212.1, A)
 Put in authoritative server Type A record for
www.networkuptopia.com and Type MX record for
networkutopia.com
 How do people get the IP address of your Web site?
2: Application Layer
76
Chapter 2: Application layer
 2.1 Principles of
network applications


app architectures
app requirements
 2.2 Web and HTTP
 2.4 Electronic Mail
 SMTP, POP3, IMAP
 2.5 DNS
 2.6 P2P file sharing
 2.7 Socket programming
with TCP
 2.8 Socket programming
with UDP
 2.9 Building a Web
server
2: Application Layer
77
P2P file sharing
Example
 Alice runs P2P client
application on her
notebook computer
 Intermittently
connects to Internet;
gets new IP address
for each connection
 Asks for “Hey Jude”
 Application displays
other peers that have
copy of Hey Jude.
 Alice chooses one of
the peers, Bob.
 File is copied from
Bob’s PC to Alice’s
notebook: HTTP
 While Alice downloads,
other users uploading
from Alice.
 Alice’s peer is both a
Web client and a
transient Web server.
All peers are servers =
highly scalable!
2: Application Layer
78
P2P: centralized directory
original “Napster” design
1) when peer connects, it
informs central server:


Bob
centralized
directory server
1
peers
IP address
content
2) Alice queries for “Hey
Jude”
3) Alice requests file from
Bob
1
3
1
2
1
Alice
2: Application Layer
79
P2P: problems with centralized directory
 Single point of failure
 Performance
bottleneck
 Copyright
infringement
file transfer is
decentralized, but
locating content is
highly centralized
2: Application Layer
80
Query flooding: Gnutella
 fully distributed
 no central server
 public domain protocol
 many Gnutella clients
implementing protocol
overlay network: graph
 edge between peer X
and Y if there’s a TCP
connection
 all active peers and
edges is overlay net
 Edge is not a physical
link
 Given peer will
typically be connected
with < 10 overlay
neighbors
2: Application Layer
81
Gnutella: protocol
 Query message
sent over existing TCP
connections
 peers forward
Query message
 QueryHit
sent over
reverse
Query
path
File transfer:
HTTP
Query
QueryHit
QueryHit
Scalability:
limited scope
flooding
2: Application Layer
82
Gnutella: Peer joining
Joining peer X must find some other peer in
Gnutella network: use list of candidate peers
2. X sequentially attempts to make TCP with peers
on list until connection setup with Y
3. X sends Ping message to Y; Y forwards Ping
message.
4. All peers receiving Ping message respond with
Pong message
5. X receives many Pong messages. It can then
setup additional TCP connections
Peer leaving: see homework problem!
1.
2: Application Layer
83
Exploiting heterogeneity: KaZaA
 Each peer is either a
group leader or assigned
to a group leader.


TCP connection between
peer and its group leader.
TCP connections between
some pairs of group
leaders.
 Group leader tracks the
content in all its
children.
ordinary peer
group-leader peer
neighoring relationships
in overlay network
2: Application Layer
84
KaZaA: Querying
 Each file has a hash and a descriptor
 Client sends keyword query to its group
leader
 Group leader responds with matches:

For each match: metadata, hash, IP address
 If group leader forwards query to other
group leaders, they respond with matches
 Client then selects files for downloading

HTTP requests using hash as identifier sent to
peers holding desired file
2: Application Layer
85
KaZaA tricks
 Limitations on simultaneous uploads
 Request queuing
 Incentive priorities
 Parallel downloading
For more info:
 J. Liang, R. Kumar, K. Ross, “Understanding KaZaA,”
(available via cis.poly.edu/~ross)
2: Application Layer
86
Chapter 2: Application layer
 2.1 Principles of
network applications
 2.2 Web and HTTP
 2.3 FTP
 2.4 Electronic Mail

SMTP, POP3, IMAP
 2.5 DNS
 2.6 P2P file sharing
 2.7 Socket programming
with TCP
 2.8 Socket programming
with UDP
 2.9 Building a Web
server
2: Application Layer
87
Socket programming
Goal: learn how to build client/server application that
communicate using sockets
Socket API
 introduced in BSD4.1 UNIX,
1981
 explicitly created, used,
released by apps
 client/server paradigm
 two types of transport
service via socket API:
 unreliable datagram
 reliable, byte streamoriented
socket
a host-local,
application-created,
OS-controlled interface
(a “door”) into which
application process can
both send and
receive messages to/from
another application
process
2: Application Layer
88
Socket-programming using TCP
Socket: a door between application process and endend-transport protocol (UCP or TCP)
TCP service: reliable transfer of bytes from one
process to another
controlled by
application
developer
controlled by
operating
system
process
process
socket
TCP with
buffers,
variables
host or
server
internet
socket
TCP with
buffers,
variables
controlled by
application
developer
controlled by
operating
system
host or
server
2: Application Layer
89
Socket programming with TCP
Client must contact server
 server process must first
be running
 server must have created
socket (door) that
welcomes client’s contact
Client contacts server by:
 creating client-local TCP
socket
 specifying IP address, port
number of server process
 When client creates
socket: client TCP
establishes connection to
server TCP
 When contacted by client,
server TCP creates new
socket for server process to
communicate with client
 allows server to talk with
multiple clients
 source port numbers
used to distinguish
clients (more in Chap 3)
application viewpoint
TCP provides reliable, in-order
transfer of bytes (“pipe”)
between client and server
2: Application Layer
90
Client/server socket interaction: TCP
Server (running on hostid)
Client
create socket,
port=x, for
incoming request:
welcomeSocket =
ServerSocket()
TCP
wait for incoming
connection request connection
connectionSocket =
welcomeSocket.accept()
read request from
connectionSocket
write reply to
connectionSocket
close
connectionSocket
setup
create socket,
connect to hostid, port=x
clientSocket =
Socket()
send request using
clientSocket
read reply from
clientSocket
close
clientSocket
2: Application Layer
91
Stream jargon
keyboard
monitor
output
stream
inFromServer
Client
Process
process
input
stream
outToServer
characters that flow into
or out of a process.
 An input stream is
attached to some input
source for the process,
e.g., keyboard or socket.
 An output stream is
attached to an output
source, e.g., monitor or
socket.
inFromUser
 A stream is a sequence of
input
stream
client
TCP
clientSocket
socket
to network
TCP
socket
from network
2: Application Layer
92
Socket programming with TCP
Example client-server app:
1) client reads line from
standard input (inFromUser
stream) , sends to server via
socket (outToServer
stream)
2) server reads line from socket
3) server converts line to
uppercase, sends back to
client
4) client reads, prints modified
line from socket
(inFromServer stream)
2: Application Layer
93
Example: Java client (TCP)
import java.io.*;
import java.net.*;
class TCPClient {
public static void main(String argv[]) throws Exception
{
String sentence;
String modifiedSentence;
Create
input stream
Create
client socket,
connect to server
Create
output stream
attached to socket
BufferedReader inFromUser =
new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(System.in));
Socket clientSocket = new Socket("hostname", 6789);
DataOutputStream outToServer =
new DataOutputStream(clientSocket.getOutputStream());
2: Application Layer
94
Example: Java client (TCP), cont.
Create
input stream
attached to socket
BufferedReader inFromServer =
new BufferedReader(new
InputStreamReader(clientSocket.getInputStream()));
sentence = inFromUser.readLine();
Send line
to server
outToServer.writeBytes(sentence + '\n');
Read line
from server
modifiedSentence = inFromServer.readLine();
System.out.println("FROM SERVER: " + modifiedSentence);
clientSocket.close();
}
}
2: Application Layer
95
Example: Java server (TCP)
import java.io.*;
import java.net.*;
class TCPServer {
Create
welcoming socket
at port 6789
Wait, on welcoming
socket for contact
by client
Create input
stream, attached
to socket
public static void main(String argv[]) throws Exception
{
String clientSentence;
String capitalizedSentence;
ServerSocket welcomeSocket = new ServerSocket(6789);
while(true) {
Socket connectionSocket = welcomeSocket.accept();
BufferedReader inFromClient =
new BufferedReader(new
InputStreamReader(connectionSocket.getInputStream()));
2: Application Layer
96
Example: Java server (TCP), cont
Create output
stream, attached
to socket
DataOutputStream outToClient =
new DataOutputStream(connectionSocket.getOutputStream());
Read in line
from socket
clientSentence = inFromClient.readLine();
capitalizedSentence = clientSentence.toUpperCase() + '\n';
Write out line
to socket
outToClient.writeBytes(capitalizedSentence);
}
}
}
End of while loop,
loop back and wait for
another client connection
2: Application Layer
97
Chapter 2: Application layer
 2.1 Principles of
network applications
 2.2 Web and HTTP
 2.3 FTP
 2.4 Electronic Mail

SMTP, POP3, IMAP
 2.5 DNS
 2.6 P2P file sharing
 2.7 Socket programming
with TCP
 2.8 Socket programming
with UDP
 2.9 Building a Web
server
2: Application Layer
98
Socket programming with UDP
UDP: no “connection” between
client and server
 no handshaking
 sender explicitly attaches
IP address and port of
destination to each packet
 server must extract IP
address, port of sender
from received packet
application viewpoint
UDP provides unreliable transfer
of groups of bytes (“datagrams”)
between client and server
UDP: transmitted data may be
received out of order, or
lost
2: Application Layer
99
Client/server socket interaction: UDP
Server (running on hostid)
create socket,
port=x, for
incoming request:
serverSocket =
DatagramSocket()
read request from
serverSocket
write reply to
serverSocket
specifying client
host address,
port number
Client
create socket,
clientSocket =
DatagramSocket()
Create, address (hostid, port=x,
send datagram request
using clientSocket
read reply from
clientSocket
close
clientSocket
2: Application Layer
100
Example: Java client (UDP)
input
stream
Client
process
monitor
inFromUser
keyboard
Process
Input: receives
packet (recall
thatTCP received
“byte stream”)
UDP
packet
receivePacket
packet (recall
that TCP sent
“byte stream”)
sendPacket
Output: sends
client
UDP
clientSocket
socket
to network
UDP
packet
UDP
socket
from network
2: Application Layer
101
Example: Java client (UDP)
import java.io.*;
import java.net.*;
Create
input stream
Create
client socket
Translate
hostname to IP
address using DNS
class UDPClient {
public static void main(String args[]) throws Exception
{
BufferedReader inFromUser =
new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(System.in));
DatagramSocket clientSocket = new DatagramSocket();
InetAddress IPAddress = InetAddress.getByName("hostname");
byte[] sendData = new byte[1024];
byte[] receiveData = new byte[1024];
String sentence = inFromUser.readLine();
sendData = sentence.getBytes();
2: Application Layer
102
Example: Java client (UDP), cont.
Create datagram
with data-to-send,
length, IP addr, port
DatagramPacket sendPacket =
new DatagramPacket(sendData, sendData.length, IPAddress, 9876);
Send datagram
to server
clientSocket.send(sendPacket);
Read datagram
from server
clientSocket.receive(receivePacket);
DatagramPacket receivePacket =
new DatagramPacket(receiveData, receiveData.length);
String modifiedSentence =
new String(receivePacket.getData());
System.out.println("FROM SERVER:" + modifiedSentence);
clientSocket.close();
}
}
2: Application Layer
103
Example: Java server (UDP)
import java.io.*;
import java.net.*;
Create
datagram socket
at port 9876
class UDPServer {
public static void main(String args[]) throws Exception
{
DatagramSocket serverSocket = new DatagramSocket(9876);
byte[] receiveData = new byte[1024];
byte[] sendData = new byte[1024];
while(true)
{
Create space for
received datagram
Receive
datagram
DatagramPacket receivePacket =
new DatagramPacket(receiveData, receiveData.length);
serverSocket.receive(receivePacket);
2: Application Layer
104
Example: Java server (UDP), cont
String sentence = new String(receivePacket.getData());
Get IP addr
port #, of
sender
InetAddress IPAddress = receivePacket.getAddress();
int port = receivePacket.getPort();
String capitalizedSentence = sentence.toUpperCase();
sendData = capitalizedSentence.getBytes();
Create datagram
to send to client
DatagramPacket sendPacket =
new DatagramPacket(sendData, sendData.length, IPAddress,
port);
Write out
datagram
to socket
serverSocket.send(sendPacket);
}
}
}
End of while loop,
loop back and wait for
another datagram
2: Application Layer
105
Chapter 2: Application layer
 2.1 Principles of
network applications


app architectures
app requirements
 2.2 Web and HTTP
 2.4 Electronic Mail
 SMTP, POP3, IMAP
 2.5 DNS
 2.6 P2P file sharing
 2.7 Socket programming
with TCP
 2.8 Socket programming
with UDP
 2.9 Building a Web
server
2: Application Layer
106
Building a simple Web server
 handles one HTTP




request
accepts the request
parses header
obtains requested file
from server’s file
system
creates HTTP response
message:

 after creating server,
you can request file
using a browser (e.g.,
IE explorer)
 see text for details
header lines + file
 sends response to client
2: Application Layer
107
Chapter 2: Summary
Our study of network apps now complete!
 Application architectures
 client-server
 P2P
 hybrid
 application service
requirements:

 specific protocols:
 HTTP
 FTP
 SMTP, POP, IMAP
 DNS
 socket programming
reliability, bandwidth,
delay
 Internet transport
service model


connection-oriented,
reliable: TCP
unreliable, datagrams: UDP
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Chapter 2: Summary
Most importantly: learned about protocols
 typical request/reply
message exchange:


client requests info or
service
server responds with
data, status code
 message formats:
 headers: fields giving
info about data
 data: info being
communicated
 control vs. data msgs
in-band, out-of-band
centralized vs. decentralized
stateless vs. stateful
reliable vs. unreliable msg
transfer
“complexity at network
edge”





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